| Dorothy Bunny Bowen Gallery Page | 
  
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 |  | forest requiem Rozome on Kimono SilkAspen branch hanger
 25.5" x 22"
 $450
  This river, plunging from high peaks yielding up snow pack,  Roars so loudly I cannot hear birdsong.  Silent is the marten, even the squirrel she pursues.  Only thunder makes itself heard over this river.  But not falling rain; even the deluge is outdone by the river's overpowering  voice.  Wait...somehow this shimmering morning,   a tiny hummingbird trills above the din.   |  | 
  
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          | Postscript | 
 | I left him to lie in state for an hour on the wood box, then carried him down  to a glade which we call our quiet garden. I removed a smooth rock at the moss  covered altar, gently scooped an earthen hollow for him, and replaced the rock.  I will think of him now as I meditate, the green moss and the red woods  columbines, his colors.
 Crystal, June  14, 2016  |  
          | About an hour after writing this, I found a male hummingbird down, still warm,  eyes open, tongue extended from its closed beak. Perhaps he hit a window and  broke his neck. I held him in the cup of my hand up where the others at the  feeder could see him, but they ignored us. Only interested in the sugar syrup  of life, not their dead compadre. 
 He was exquisite: little black legs and talons of a size to grasp the tiniest  twig; black throat bib which flashed red in the sun; iridescent green shoulders  and wings made to hover and execute amazing aerial acrobatics. He had flown  perhaps a thousand miles to return to the Colorado high country, only to die there.
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